[HTML][HTML] The ectopic expression of Pax4 in the mouse pancreas converts progenitor cells into α and subsequently β cells

P Collombat, X Xu, P Ravassard, B Sosa-Pineda… - Cell, 2009 - cell.com
P Collombat, X Xu, P Ravassard, B Sosa-Pineda, S Dussaud, N Billestrup, OD Madsen…
Cell, 2009cell.com
We have previously reported that the loss of Arx and/or Pax4 gene activity leads to a shift in
the fate of the different endocrine cell subtypes in the mouse pancreas, without affecting the
total endocrine cell numbers. Here, we conditionally and ectopically express Pax4 using
different cell-specific promoters and demonstrate that Pax4 forces endocrine precursor cells,
as well as mature α cells, to adopt a β cell destiny. This results in a glucagon deficiency that
provokes a compensatory and continuous glucagon+ cell neogenesis requiring the re …
Summary
We have previously reported that the loss of Arx and/or Pax4 gene activity leads to a shift in the fate of the different endocrine cell subtypes in the mouse pancreas, without affecting the total endocrine cell numbers. Here, we conditionally and ectopically express Pax4 using different cell-specific promoters and demonstrate that Pax4 forces endocrine precursor cells, as well as mature α cells, to adopt a β cell destiny. This results in a glucagon deficiency that provokes a compensatory and continuous glucagon+ cell neogenesis requiring the re-expression of the proendocrine gene Ngn3. However, the newly formed α cells fail to correct the hypoglucagonemia since they subsequently acquire a β cell phenotype upon Pax4 ectopic expression. Notably, this cycle of neogenesis and redifferentiation caused by ectopic expression of Pax4 in α cells is capable of restoring a functional β cell mass and curing diabetes in animals that have been chemically depleted of β cells.
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